Alan Shipman: 5 books

Book cover of Transcending Transaction

Transcending Transaction

The Search for Self-Generating Markets

by Alan Shipman
Language: English
Release Date: November 22, 2001

Transcending Transaction examines recent attempts to show how, in theory and history, market transaction can emerge from the unregulated interaction of competitive traders. Alan Shipman examines the legal, informational, organisational, social and financial foundations of market trade, focusing on the possible routes by which it could arise without
Book cover of Capitalism without Capital

Capitalism without Capital

Accounting for the crash

by Alan Shipman
Language: English
Release Date: June 9, 2015

Financial crisis, recession and worsening inequality have long been blamed on a surplus of capital. But the actions that led the latest boom and bust by banks and businesses, households and governments - can better be explained capital's increasing scarcity. Efforts to track it down confirm its disappearance.
Book cover of Knowledge Monopolies

Knowledge Monopolies

The Academisation of Society

by Alan Shipman
Language: English
Release Date: June 22, 2016

Historians and sociologists chart the consequences of the expansion of knowledge; philosophers of science examine the causes. This book bridges the gap. The focus is on 'academisation' - the paradox whereby, as the general public becomes better educated to live and work with knowledge, the 'academy'...
Book cover of Wynne Godley

Wynne Godley

A Biography

by Alan Shipman
Language: English
Release Date: April 1, 2019

This  timely biography of the economist  Wynne Godley (1926-2010) charts his long and often crisis-blown route to a new way of understanding  whole economies. It shows how early frustrations as a policy-maker enabled him to glimpse the cliff-edges other macro-modellers missed, and re-arm ‘Keynesian’...
Book cover of The New Power Elite

The New Power Elite

Inequality, Politics and Greed

by Alan Shipman, Bryan Turner, June Edmunds
Language: English
Release Date: April 13, 2018

Elites have always ruled – wielding inordinate power and wealth, taking decisions that shape life for the rest. In good times the ‘1%’ can hide their privilege, or use growing social mobility and economic prosperity as a justification. When times get tougher there’s a backlash. So the first...
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